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“Conrado Benitez” Brigade (Conrado Benitez Brigadistas)—100,000 young volunteers (ages 10–19) who left school to live and work with students in the countryside. The number of students leaving schools to volunteer was so great that an alternative education was put in place for 8 months of the 1961 school year.
Thousands of women became teachers and other cared for the young boys and girls ages 11-16, who formed the Conrado Benitez Brigade." [6] "On December 22, 1961, when Cuba was declared a "territory Free of Illiteracy" 55% of the 700,000 new literates were women. [6]
Conrado Benitez (November 26, 1889 – January 4, 1971) was a Filipino statesman, writer, and educator. He founded the Philippine Rural Reconstruction Movement and was one of the drafters of the 1935 Constitution of the Philippines .
Conrado Benitez (1889–1971), former dean of the University of the Philippines; Conrado Cabrera (born 1967), retired male track cyclist from Cuba; Conrado Conde (born 1911), Filipino film director and an actor; Conrado Dayrit (1919–2007), Filipino doctor and scientist known for his advocacy of coconut oil
The following is an incomplete list of colleges and universities in Cuba: Provincial colleges. Agrarian University of Havana "Fructuoso Rodríguez", ...
Estadio Conrado Benítez Jiguaní, Cuba: Capacity: 2,000: Manager: ... They play their home games at the Estadio Mártires de Barbados in Bayamo or at the Conrado ...
Conrado Benitez, educator (1981) Hubert de Blanck, composer (1956) Jose D. Blino, aviation pioneer (1970) Humphrey Bogart, actor (1995) Simón Bolívar, liberator of Venezuela (1937) Francisco Bolognesi, Peruvian military hero (1988) Elisa Bonaparte, princess of Lucca and Piombino (1969) Napoleon Bonaparte, emperor of France (1969)
Cover of Carteles, November 29, 1931, drawn by Conrado Massaguer. Carteles was a Cuban magazine created by the famous brothers Oscar H. Massaguer and Conrado Walter Massaguer, who had already created the successful magazine Social. Carteles overtook Social, however, and gained the widest circulation of any magazine in Latin America. [1]